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Mandu-gwa
Type Yumil-gwa
Place of origin Korea
Associated cuisine Korean cuisine
Main ingredientsWheat flour, jujube, cinnamon powder, honey
Ingredients generally used Sesame oil, ginger juice, cheongju
Korean name
Hangul
만두과
Hanja
饅頭菓
Revised Romanizationmandu-gwa
McCune–Reischauermandu-gwa
IPA [man.du.ɡwa]

Mandu-gwa ( Korean만두과; Hanja饅頭菓) is a Korean sweet dumpling filled with sweetened ingredients and coated with jocheong (rice syrup). It is a type of yumil-gwa, a deep-fried hangwa (Korean confection) made with wheat flour. [1] Mandu means "dumplings" and gwa means "confection". Mandu-gwa is typically eaten as a dessert or bamcham (late-night snack). [2]

Preparation

The dough is prepared by sifting wheat flour and kneading it with sesame oil, honey, ginger juice and clear, refined rice wine known as cheongju. [3] The filling is usually made by mixing steamed, deseeded and minced jujube, cinnamon powder and honey. [3] Only a small amount of filling is put on a flattened piece of dough. The covering should be thick, to prevent the confectionery from bursting out after it is deep-fried. [2] After frying the dough, the dumpling is marinated in jocheong (rice syrup). [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "mandu-gwa" 만두과. Standard Korean Language Dictionary (in Korean). National Institute of Korean Language. Archived from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "mandu-gwa" 만두과. Doopedia (in Korean). Doosan Corporation. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  3. ^ a b Kwon, Yong-Seok; Kim, Young; Kim, Yang-Suk; Choe, Jeong-Sook; Lee, Jin-Young (2012). "An Exploratory Study on Kwa-Jung-ryu of Head Families". Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture (in Korean). 27 (6): 588–597. doi: 10.7318/kjfc/2012.27.6.588.